For a guy who felt he hadn't got a break all season in Phoenix,
Mueller's goal was a breakthrough - and a key reason Colorado
was able to break the longest home winning streak in the Ducks'
history.

Matt Duchene scored the go-ahead goal with 11:51 to play, Chris
Stewart had a goal and two assists, and the Avalanche ended the
Ducks' 11-game home roll with a 4-3 victory Wednesday night.

The Avalanche are gambling on Mueller after trading
second-leading scorer Wojtek Wolski to the Coyotes for the
struggling second-year pro. Playing his third game in three
nights, Mueller immediately took a key role on Colorado's power
play - and he tied it late in the second period with the
flukiest of goals.

"At this point, I don't care how it goes in," said Mueller, who
looked gratefully bewildered when his shot went in. "You throw
it on the net, sometimes it goes in. I feel great just letting
my teammates know immediately that I can contribute. It feels
unbelievable being in a new atmosphere."

U.S. Olympian Paul Stastny had three assists for the Avalanche.
T.J. Galiardi also scored and Craig Anderson made 31 saves while
Colorado rallied from a 2-0 deficit and a two-shot first period
with three straight goals on the power play.

They eventually held off the Ducks, who returned from the
Olympic break with six weary medalists in their lineup.

"After that first period, we realized we couldn't sit back,"
Colorado coach Joe Sacco said. "We had to put more passion into
our game. We got more involved physically, and that's what kept
us on our toes late."

Anaheim's Teemu Selanne scored his 598th NHL goal, and captain
Scott Niedermayer's power-play goal with 3:05 left trimmed
Colorado's lead, but the Ducks - who won 14 of 20 before the
break - ended up with their first loss at the Honda Center since
Dec. 6.

Jason Blake had a goal and an assist, and Hiller made 21 saves
as Anaheim wasted a chance to move into ninth place in the
Western Conference standings. The Ducks' medalists might have
needed more than two or three days off after the high-pressure
tournament, with Canadian center Ryan Getzlaf looking
particularly gassed while missing a handful of point-blank
scoring chances late.

"We worked hard before the break to get into a position where we
could at least chase a playoff spot," Niedermayer said. "That's
why we're so disappointed we let that one slip away. We were
skating and taking care of the puck in the first period. It just
all of a sudden seemed to go their way."

Anaheim's home winning streak was the longest in franchise
history, and tied with Washington for the longest in the NHL
this season.

Selanne also scored in his first game since becoming the leading
scorer in Olympic hockey. The 18th-leading goal-scorer in NHL
history converted an easy shot after a no-look pass from Blake -
but Anaheim struggled mightily after that goal.

"We played one period of hockey," Anaheim coach Randy Carlyle
said. "We didn't play very well after the first period. They
turned it up, and we stopped doing what we needed to do and
started getting quick. We played too soft around the puck. Some
individuals had bad nights."

The Ducks played with just five defensemen after a flurry of
trades in the previous 48 hours. Anaheim bolstered its
struggling blue line by acquiring defensemen Lubomir Visnovsky
from Edmonton and Aaron Ward from Carolina, shipping Ryan
Whitney to the Oilers just one day after he returned from
winning a silver medal with the U.S. team in Vancouver.

The Avalanche also were active at the deadline, reacquiring
veteran Stephane Yelle before swapping 48-point scorer Wolski
for Mueller, who had just 17 points in 54 games with Phoenix.
Colorado is betting a change of scenery will inspire the former
No. 8 overall draft pick.

"His first game, new team, new surroundings, I thought he did a
real nice job," Sacco said. "He created some offense like we
expected him to. He did a good job defensively. I just think
he'll continue to improve and get better."

After his goal, Mueller took a foolish tripping penalty early in
the third period, ruining a power play for the Avalanche - but
Anaheim's Steve Eminger created the power play that led to
Duchene's score by flipping the puck over the glass moments
later for a delay-of-game call.

NOTES: Anaheim also exchanged backup goalies with Calgary,
getting Curtis McElhinney for Vesa Toskala, who never played in
a game for the Ducks after arriving in a trade with Toronto in
late January. ... RW Dan Sexton was back in Anaheim's lineup for
the first time since Jan. 29 after spending the last month in
the minors. He scored 18 points in 28 games earlier this season.